Philip wrote:No, Miller is not saying that the Genesis accounts are not historical - he believes they ARE. But he's saying that they were not likely meant to address an accurate understanding of the SCIENCE to a pre-scientific age peoples - of which the writer(s) themselves likely had little understanding of. Yes, the original audience does indeed matter - which is much of Miller's point. These are pre-scientific age people who were just out of 400 years of absorbing pagan religious beliefs and their creation myths. Jac, seriously, you will only be arguing from ignorance if you do not get this book. There is just no way that the wordings could so closely parallel the myths of the Egyptians by mere happenstance - it must be on purpose. And you can't simply say with confidence that Mose's (and any other writers') purpose was precisely just one thing (concerning time references). Let's not forget that the actual passages referencing time issues are very brief.
First, I strongly object to the claim that I am "only arguing from ignorance if I do not get this book." What percentage of scholars have read Miller? Do they all argue from ignorance having not read this particular book? Of course not. Second, you assume that I have not read the Egyptian a Babylonian myths themselves. As a matter of fact, I have. Moreover, I have read other books that have made the point that Moses is intentionally borrowing from the those forms is composition of Genesis 1. As such, the ideas you are presenting are hardly novel to me. What I object to are the conclusions you are drawing from them.
Second, I do NOT say the commonalities are "by mere happenstance." On the contrary, I have said it was intentional. What I object to is the suggestion that Moses' use of certain forms means that the words mean something other than what they normally do. There is zero evidence for that claim. Now, if you want to cite specific arguments from Miller's work and we can talk about that, then fine. But otherwise, far from me arguing from ignorance, you are actually just appealing to authority. I'm open to discussing whatever ideas you like, but with all do respect, it isn't my job to do your work for you. If you have an idea that you think is important, then share it and then offer your conclusions and how you get them.
Jac, you, as well, interpret the science via your YEC beliefs. In fact, you often express your own lack of scientific knowledge, yet then dismiss it as if that is irrelevant. You also seem to conveniently interpret things literally when they fit, and otherwise when they don't. And to suggest that OEC scientist interpret the scientific evidence the way they do merely because they have OEC views is not credible - and to say this makes me believe you are very lacking in knowledge concerning the evidence - else I believe you would be more charitable about those who have reasonably come to certain conclusions rather than other ones. To say that concluding that the universe and earth are ancient has only happened due to what one thinks the Bible teaches about the length of the Creation Days just isn't credible, as it is in no way nearly so simple. Qualified Christians are interpreting various evidences as pointing toward an ancient Creation largely independent of what they believe about Scripture - as repeat observations made for many other studies have used the very same methodology while also lending strong support to conclude great age. I would THINK God would want the evidences to appear in sync with whatever the truth of the matter is. Yet maybe not - but it is an interesting question. God well knows that most have sincerely used their best abilities and reason (and many, prayerfully as well) - which He gave them, by the way - to analyze and draw conclusions. But you seem to be asserting that OEC Christians are basically wasting their time, and that they just need to study theology and Hebrew in far greater detail and pay little attention to the scientific aspects. Again, the Creation that we can observe IS another testimony. So it's reasonable to wonder why God would not make our observations where they almost universally would draw an obvious conclusion about the matter - UNLESS - He doesn't want it to be obvious. But again, why hide what would be a powerful witness to the world?
I never said that anyone is "concluding that the universe and earth are ancient has only happened due to what one thinks the Bible teaches about the length of the Creation Days." I don't even know how you got that out of my words. You have it exactly backwards. I Say that people are concluding that the Bible teaches an ancient earth because what they think science says.
As for me interpreting science through YEC, I certainly don't, and that for the simple reason that I don't interpret science at all. I'm not qualified to speak on the subject, and so I don't. However, those who are qualified to speak on the subject are perfectly justified in interpreting the scientific evidence through the YEC lens. The claim "you cannot interpret Scripture by science" is fundamentally different from "you cannot interpret science by Scripture." The former is a hermeneutical issue that has to do with how we interpret written texts. The latter is an epistemological issue that has to do with the assumptions we choose to make in reconstructing a probable history to explain the data as we have it. And this goes to the distinction between observational and forensic science. The age of the earth is a matter of the latter, not the former. And given the latter, our epistemological frameworks are extremely important. Not only are the valid, they are necessary. But the same is not true when looking at Scripture. For not only is such external data not necessary, it is invalid to apply it, because the nature of the discipline.
It matters not a whit what earlier Christians from other eras thought about the age issue, as while much earlier, that doesn't mean they correctly understood it any more than numbers today mean it. Some books were first thought to be canonical - or not - and then beliefs about them changed. And to assert that the writers fully understood all aspects of the text that God inspired them to write just doesn't hold up. That's assuming far more than can be proven or with what we see concerning other Scriptural issues - particularly distant prophetic utterances.
It matters a great deal. You seem to have misunderstood my argument. I am NOT saying this:
1. The CFs were YECs
2. The CFs were correct
3. Therefore, YEC is correct
What I AM saying is this:
1. If OEC were a legitimate natural, normal, or literal reading of the text, then we should see evidence of it being held by someone in church history
2. We do not see evidence of an OEC reading of Genesis in church history
3. Therefore, OEC is likely not a natural, normal, or literal reading of the text
4. But OEC is held today by many scholars regardless of it's unnatural reading
5. Unnatural readings require an explanation for their origin from outside the text, and those origins ought to be closely related to their central premise
6. Thus OEC requires an explanation for its origin from outside the text, and that origin ought to be closely related to its central premise
And, of course, I argue that the 20th century scientific consensus of the age of the universe is a fitting event to serve as the origin of the the development of OEC theology. And on this, I refer you back to N.T. Wright's historical method of proving the resurrection of Christ.
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Byblos wrote:But Jac, if we don't allow for the possibility of an erroneously held historical position vis-a-vis the age of the earth, surely then we ought not allow the same possibility vis-a-vis authority. There is, after all, 1,600 years of historical Catholicism before the big protest.
I challenge the premise. I do not believe the authority of the magisterium is an uncontested notion in church history. In fact, just the opposite. I think a proper study of chruch history shows that it was a VERY contentious issue, and further, we can trace it's theological developments through external political pressures in almost precisely the same way we can with the development of the OEC model. Beyond the strictly philosophical arguments I have given, then, against the authority of the magisterium, and besides the Scriptural arguments I've offered against it, I believe historical theology actually argues against it as well. Sorry!
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abelcainsbrother wrote:The only way you can interpret Genesis 1 to believe it teaches the heavens and earth are about 6000 years old is if you blend <a class="rtBibleRef" href="
http://biblia.com/bible/nasb95/Genesis%201.1-3" data-reference="Genesis 1.1-3" data-version="nasb95" data-purpose="bible-reference" target="_blank">Genesis 1:1-3</a> all together and make verse 1 and 2 part of the first day which starts in verse 3.You will notice before every day God speaks and then the day ends with "and the evening and the morning were the first day,2nd day,on and on...to the 6th day" which I do believe represents 24 hour days. But Young earth creationists blending <a class="rtBibleRef" href="
http://biblia.com/bible/nasb95/Genesis%201.1-2" data-reference="Genesis 1.1-2" data-version="nasb95" data-purpose="bible-reference" target="_blank">Genesis 1:1-2</a> into the first day is where their interpretation is messed up and I have actually read articles from young earth creationists where they do this like "Sunlight before the sun" by John D Morris
http://www.icr.org/articles/view/3620/306/.
The fact is that verse 1 and 2 are before the first day and the truth is we can only speculate how much time was between <a class="rtBibleRef" href="
http://biblia.com/bible/nasb95/Genesis1.1" data-reference="Genesis1.1" data-version="nasb95" data-purpose="bible-reference" target="_blank">Genesis1:1</a> and <a class="rtBibleRef" href="
http://biblia.com/bible/nasb95/Genesis%201.2" data-reference="Genesis 1.2" data-version="nasb95" data-purpose="bible-reference" target="_blank">2</a> and the first day in verse 3. And since science has all kinds of evidence that proves the heavens and earth are old why deny it and stick to a rigid doctrine and ignore it when you are having to blend verse 1,2 and 3 together to believe the earth is 6000 years old? It is not biblical to believe God created the heavens and the earth in a flawed state and then decorated it like YEC believe, read <a class="rtBibleRef" href="
http://biblia.com/bible/nasb95/Job%2038.1-7" data-reference="Job 38.1-7" data-version="nasb95" data-purpose="bible-reference" target="_blank">Job 38:1-7</a>.It makes God look weak because when God first created the heavens and the earth they were perfect,but something happened to change that as we can see before the first day in verse 3.
Also even if it is true that an old earth view did not come until the 20th century when geologists were discovering the earth was old God's word is a revelation and is revealed over time but I have seen evidence to the contrary as ancient jewish scholars some 2000 years ago in their dispute with Gnostics claimed that the only thing God created on the first day was light and this is reflected in the Sarajevo Haggadah murials.
I've not made any claims in this thread about the age of the earth, and I've certainly not said that it is 6000 years old. I am talking about the interpretation of
yom. Beyond that, I see no warrant for positing anything like a gap between Gen 1:2 and 3. And beyond THAT, with all due respect to you, it just isn't a position I find interesting enough to argue about. Please don't take any offense at that. I'm just not going to debate the gap theory any more than I am the framework hypothesis. It just doesn't reach the threshold of basic credibility for me.
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RickD wrote:I haven't really studied the history of the church in regards to who believed OEC or YEC, like you've studied. I know you're very thorough in your studies, and you know your history. That's why I'm a little confused. Maybe you can clear something up for me. You are saying now, that no one held to an OEC view prior to the 20th century. Yet in this
thread from a while back, you said:
Of course, the C.D. model is not the only model. It is not the popular model among scholars. Further, we can argue pretty well that it isn't the most theologically sound article. If you study where it came from, you'll find some interesting history there. So, your entire argument is moot . . . it's a straw man. So, my beliefs on the matter . . . well . . . they don't matter. Nor do yours. Here's the question:
Does the evidence presented by modern science agree or disagree with the biblical model?
Answer: it agrees with the day-age interpretation of Genesis 1-2, a position that has been argued and held for thousands of years.
What you're saying now, seems to directly contradict what you said back then.
You said that the biblical model "agrees with the day-age interpretation of Genesis 1-2, a position that has been argued and held for thousands of years."
And as I said, you are very thorough in your research. What were you referring to then, since now you explicitly deny what you asserted then? Do you remember which theologians you used to base that assertion on?
Hopefully you can clear up my confusion before we move forward.
Thanks
Sure. Back when I said that, I had simply not looked at the historical evidence. I was taking Ross at his word (I had read within the past couple of years a few books he had written on the subject). When I went back and starting checking behind him, I was shocked to discover that he was very mistaken.
In short, yes, my statements then are completely contradicted by what I am saying now. And that is because I was wrong back then. Completely and totally wrong. Someone would have done well to ask me to quote a church father or early Jewish interpreter who held to OEC. I wouldn't have found anything (to my great dismay!).
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ryanbouma wrote:I can't say this is a reasonable challenge. What motivation do Christians have for misintrepreting the data to "hold on to their framework"? YEC would be convenient for many Christians. They'd be happy to make the shift. I was a Gap Theorist from the age of 12, because that's the only framework that I could see matched the Bible and what I could see in nature. Much like what Phillip is saying, I thought, at the age of 12, God hasn't deceived me; there are stars billions of light years away, we can measure the speed of light, so how did the light get here so quickly? My parents answered that it was possible "God just made it happen". But that didn't sit well. As I matured, I learned of interpreting the days to mean long periods of time and I've slowly latched onto this framework. But believe me, if the data was interpreted by me to fit YEC, I'd happily change that position. So I personally reject the idea I interpret the scientific data to conform to my framework.
Your charge sounds more directed to atheists. But then, what motivation do they have for interpresting the big bang the way they have done. A steady state universe fit their framework much more nicely. Your challenge simply does not match what we could expect from the secular scientific community.
So then we are back to Phillip's premis, that people are "sincerely trying to correctly interpret the data". You may argue they have misinterpreted the data, but that's an uphill battle for you certainly.
I think you have me exactly backwards. When I talk about a "framework," I am NOT talking about a theological framework, but rather that SCIENTIFIC framework. So what motivation do Christians have to misinterpret the data? A GREAT motivation. In fact, the SAME motivation you admit in your comments here: "that's the only framework that I could see matched the Bible." It's very convenient, isn't it? OEC seems to match the scientific evidence, so it is easier to hold than YEC. You don't have to answer pesky questions about God "deceiving" you.
I believe the flood was likely a glacial lake outburst flood, possibly cause by the majority of the north american continent being a giant lake with ice shores. During the warming in the past 100,000 years the shores melted and the lake waters burst forth raising sea levels rapidly and then subsiding over a period of about 6 months and slowly there after. I could be wrong, this is how I've interpreted my geology background, Bible reading, and other influences. If this were how the flood event occured, I view your points on the passage this way.
But the Bible doesn't speak about "glacial lake outburst." It says that it rained for forty days and nights and that the springs from the deep opened. So I appreciate your attempt at a naturalistic explanation (much as I appreciate the attempts of people to naturalistically explain the Ten Plagues), but you aren't starting with what the text actually says caused the flood. In any case . . .
1 - 4. Yes, we would expect an extremely powerful and rush of water that no man could out run. It would flood the land above any mountain in sight. It's clear to me these first four points are totally consistent with this type of flood.
5. High mountains is difficult to understand. There's no quantative measurement here. Does the text say perhaps, the highest mountains? Or just high mountains? If this were a local flood, they would be the high visible mountains, no?
6 - 8. This kind of flood would impact the entire globe and all the mountains on the globe. But it would not have covered the highest mountains completely, not even close. Everest would have stood well above these flood waters. Assuming God wanted to destroy the wicked people, this would have done the job perfectly. Despite this, based on your interpretation, I can see how "heavens" or the "whole sky" means local. Which I suppose would be local since Everest and other medium and large sized mountains would still be uncovered.
And I don't see how the "whole sky" can be local. If it were local, then we aren't talking about "the whole sky." As as far as how high the mountains are, the grammar doesn't help. It is, though, a bit silly, in my view, to suggest that when the ark came to rest on the mountains of ararat that we are talking about some low foothills. Were that the case, the higher mountains would have been well within view, which contradicts the text. No, it's best to take Moses' meaning as being an emphasis of the universal nature of the flood. ALL the mountains under the WHOLE sky were covered deeply (by fifteen cubits!) by very powerful waters.
So that raises some questions for me. Does the text suggest even the highest mountains outside the land of living were COVERED with water? If it doesn't suggest that, do points 6 to 8 allow for the whole globe to be impacted, yet high altitude regions to be unaffected?
Thanks.
Yes, ALL mountains were COVERED with water. No, the high altitude regions were not unaffected. They were covered with water. To suggest otherwise is to deny the claim that ALL the mountains under ALL the sky were covered, and further that the mechanism of producing the water was forty days and nights of rain plus the springs of the deep bursting open.
Hope that helps!